http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NK09Ak01.html

Nov 9, 2012 


The politics of money in Palestine
By Ramzy Baroud 

In Malaysia, a small group of community activists are busy at work developing 
projects that benefit most vulnerable members of Palestinian society in Gaza. 

Working under the umbrella of Viva Palestina Malaysia (VPM), the group shows 
solidarity through empowerment projects: interest free loans for small 
projects, providing employment for women, supplying thousands of solar lamps 
aimed at ending the persistent darkness for many families, and more. 

The overall value of the combined efforts of VPM is important because it is 
long-lasting. Equally important, the channeled funds are not part of a 
political scheme nor are aimed to exact concession. This can hardly be said of 
much of the relationship  
  

between Palestinian leadership and society, and outside funds, which began 
pouring it, with a clear political manual that has been dutifully followed by 
those who provide the funds and those who receive them. 

That relationship was once more a subject of scurrility and discussion 
following the recent visit by Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, emir of Qatar 
to Gaza, which has been under an Israeli siege soon following Hamas' victory in 
the general elections in 2006. The siege became complete in 2007, when Hamas 
clashed with its rival Fatah, perceived by Israel and the US as "moderate". 
Al-Jazeera said the emir's arrival to Gaza was to "to inaugurate a Qatari 
investment project worth hundreds of millions of dollars to rebuild the 
impoverished and overcrowded coastal enclave". Gaza Prime Minister Ismail 
Haniyeh interpreted the visit at a grander scale: "The visit of the emir 
announces officially the breaching of the political and economical siege 
imposed on Gaza for more than five years." 

Analysts, depending on their political leanings, however, spoke of entirely 
different mechanism that compelled Qatar's generosity. Those sympathetic to 
Fatah warned that empowering Hamas in the Gaza enclave to act as a state will 
further deepen the national divide. Others spoke more candidly of a Qatari 
reward to Hamas for leaving Syria at the height of the regional power play 
ignited by the so-called Arab Spring. 

Judging by the largely measured or reserved response from Israel, the US and 
other countries that would have made it impossible for the emir to visit Gaza 
in the first place, Syria might have been the keyword behind the seemingly 
selfless effort. 

But in any case, there are hardly any inconsistencies between this episode and 
a history rife of the political manipulation of funds. It is an intrinsic 
relationship that goes even earlier than the signing of the Oslo Accords in 
September 1993. Oslo, however, officiated and cemented that relationship in 
many respects. Merely two weeks after the signing of the Declaration of 
Principles issues of international aid became a core subject involving mostly 
Western donor countries, Arab countries and others. 

Although the political dominion of Oslo is all but dead, international aid 
continues to flow. The rise and decline in funds are often affiliated with the 
Palestinian Authority (PA) report card, as in its ability to sustain a 
political charade and serve as Israel's "partner" despite the fact that Israel 
has completely altered the physical reality upon which Oslo was predicated. 

Despite appearances, Mahmoud Abbas' PA is much less immune to political 
arm-twisting as a result of its nearly two-decade entanglement of the 
international aid cartel, than Hamas. The latter is barely learning the ropes. 
They too will eventually learn that there is no such thing as free money, 
especially when those offering their services are very much at the heart of the 
political struggle for the future of the Middle East. 

The link between political statements and action and money is obvious for all 
to see. What may appear as political concessions can oftentimes be attributed 
to some funds being frozen or waiting to be delivered. It is transaction-based 
politics at its best. 

While the PA's budget deficit stands at US$1.3 billion, old friends are barely 
in a hurry to offset the financial crisis. The US is yet to free $200 million 
it pledged for the year 2012. The decision has everything to do with the PA's 
attempt last year to obtain UN membership for Palestine. 

Israel on the other hand agreed to an early transfer of $78 million of tax 
revenues it collects on behalf of the PA fearing that a collapse of PA 
institutions could prove too costly for Israel as well. With the conspicuous 
retreat of international donors, and the measured Israeli moves, Israel is now 
earning a greater stake in the PA political investment in the West Bank. Israel 
is notorious for manipulating the weaknesses of the PA whenever the opportunity 
arises, as it surely will. 

The financial entanglement of the Palestinians to obtain political goals is not 
confined to such obvious examples. In fact that political/financial barter is a 
major component that defines the relationship between Palestinian leaderships 
and factions and their supporters. 

It is the same paradigm that turned thousands of NGOs in Palestine into 
disconnected entities, less concerned with uniting behind a national liberation 
program, and more concerned with maintaining attractive portfolios that make 
their services more marketable among potential donors, mostly affiliated with 
the donors' countries that have long leased the Palestinian political will in 
the first place. 

It is difficult to say what it will take to free the Palestinian leadership and 
society from these impossible entanglements. But it goes without saying that 
those who rent their sovereignty to the highest bidder have no business 
speaking of national liberation, popular resistance and all the right sounding, 
but empty slogans. 

Ramzy Baroud (ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally syndicated columnist and 
the editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a 
Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story. 

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